Overview of all currently and near future available commercial launch vehicles, sites. Published in Feb, 2016

Quote

THE SPACE TRANSPORTATION INDUSTRYAt $5.9B in revenues in 20141, the global space transportation industry is arelatively small part of the overall $323B global space industry. But without it,space-based services would be impossible. It is an enabling capability, one thatmakes it possible to send national security and commercial satellites into orbit,probes into the solar system, and humans on exploration missions.

THE SPACE INDUSTRYFor context, the global space industry is estimated to have been $323B in 2014.About $203B (63%) of this was revenue generated by companies providingservices like television; mobile, fixed, and broadband communications; remotesensing; satellite systems and ground equipment manufacturing and sales; and, ofcourse, launch services. The remaining $120B (37%) constitutes government spacebudgets and global navigation satellite system (GNSS) chipsets and services.The U.S. space industry was approximately $125B in 2014. This includes $87Bin revenues generated by satellite services, satellite manufacturing, satelliteground equipment, and launch services as well as $38B spent on spaceprograms by the U.S. government. U.S. launch service providers accountedfor about $2.4B in total revenues or 41% of global launch services. FAA AST licensedlaunches accounted for $617M of the $2.4B.

Expendable Falcon Heavy. BFR is also listed in its expendable version.

Some LEO constellations are not listed in forecast launches including SpaceX (as they don't have to buy the launches on the open market AST have no visibility of numbers or timing). So we have the strange situation that half the likely 2020 launches are not in the forcast.

Also spotted some out-of-date info (as of end 2017) and some missing info (e.g. Merlin 1D vac).

A weakness is that is it is for commercial space transportation, so payloads and markets get much less review.